A brief history of Discourses of Climate Delay

2019 was an exciting time for many climate scientists and researchers. The kids were out protesting on the streets and we felt that finally climate change was getting the public attention it deserved. And it wasn't the usual hand wringing, two-sides discussion with an undertone that it can't be all that bad, but a grown-up conversation with children telling us like it is.

It was around this time that myself and a group of friends and colleagues started searching around for new language to describe an emerging form of climate denial. We had observed that many politicians and public commentators - often on the liberal end of the spectrum - would re-assure us during these discussions that they understood the science and impacts of climate change... but then in the same breath would pour cold water on policies and actions to address it. Inspired by some Twitter conversations, we called this "climate delay" and set out to document the different types and flavours of arguments we had come across.

The result was a commentary that we published in a new open access journal called Global Sustainability. We tried to situate our new concept within an established scholarship on climate denial and obstruction techniques, most famously represented by The Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway. But at the same time, we wrote this piece for the public, and tried to make it as accessible as possible. That's why we drew a simple graphic to describe the concept, and tried to boil the arguments down to four main categories.

Discourses of climate delay - the article.

To say the response was large is an understatement. Julia Steinberger posted about it on Twitter and the whole thing blew up. We have never seen anything like it. I find it especially gratifying to see how the article is used by all kinds of groups, from activisits to communicators, policy makers and academics. As you can see below, it has inspired art works, a comic book, a game and a museum exhibition. On social media it has been turned into a bingo card, has been translated into multiple languages, and adapted for other fields of public policy. Discourses of climate delay is continuously referred to in news articles and commentaries and it remains one of my most highly cited articles in the academic literature.